Crime After Crime (comic story)

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Opening Tag

The Doctor and Martha are following alien robbers with plans for the Earth in the past, present and future …

Summary

Following the alien teleport to its secret lair, the Doctor and Martha find themselves on a neutral space capsule where Big Yedari (one of the most wanted crime lords in future history) is attempting to choose between two alien gangs of Verx and Alsh to rob Earth of its treasures throughout time. The two gangs have engaged in a contest to prove who is the most successful. Unfortunately the Doctor’s interference has ruined the contest. The Doctor creates a disturbance by convincing Big Yedari that he was double-crossed by the Alsh leader, and while the aliens fight amongst themselves, the Doctor and Martha (stealing one of the teleporting device) seal themselves in the control centre. There the Doctor seals off the capsule, disables all the remaining teleporting devices, sets the docked craft loose, traps the aliens and Big Yedari, teleport across to the Yedari ship and sends a message to the nearest space cops, before teleporting to Earth to collect the TARDIS.

Characters

  • Tenth Doctor
  • Martha Jones
  • Big Yedari – one of the universes most wanted crime lords. Green, reptillian, humanoid, with blue eyes, a cigar smoking ganster, with pincer like hands.
  • Alsh – Green humanoid creatures with bulbous yellow eyes set in an elongated oval face.
  • Verx - Four armed, four fingered green humanoids with red eyes and prominent cranial structures with full sided ears.

Original Print Details (Publication with page count and closing captions)

  1. Doctor Who Battles in Time Issue 29 (4 pages) THE END

Reprints

  • None to date

Notes

  • Supporting the series of collectable Doctor Who trading cards, the magazine title, carried a regular 4 page comic strip series of the Tenth Doctor’s adventures.
  • Many of the individually titled comic strip adventures were themed over several issues, but were relatively self contained ‘episodes’.
  • The limitation of only 4 pages meant that stories often lacked some depth in comparrison to other regular comic strips running at the same time.
  • Style wise, the artwork and colours were bold and bright reflecting the tone of the magazine and, as with Doctor Who Adventures), it reflected the appeal to younger readers than that catered for by Doctor Who Magazine.

References

to be added

Continuity

to be added

External Links